Traditional authorities are partially to responsible for the rise in galamsey activity, according to Osafo Maafo.

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Yaw Osafo Maafo, the senior presidential advisor, has blamed traditional elders in part for the increased contamination of water bodies in the country by illegal miners.

According to Osafo Maafo, some chiefs in places where illicit mining, also known as “galamsey,” occurs donate their lands to the miners, who subsequently contaminate the water sources beyond cleansing.

Yaw Osafo Maafo delivered the keynote address during the 23rd General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church of Ghana at Kwahu Abetifi, Eastern Region.

“Look at what galamsey is doing to the land, and should we allow monies that a few people want to make to destroy the very base of water that we need to drink? There are areas where you cannot even purify the water and where you can, we are spending more than three times what we used to spend in purification and all this is happening in the direct face of our chiefs that gave the land for the galamsey.”

He also expressed concern about the growing problem of corruption, despite the high number of Christians in Ghana.

“If 72 percent of us are Christians and corruption begins to grow from bad to worse, then there is something wrong with even the message that we give to this 72 percent of the population. We need to do some retrospection and as a country, together with the government, take certain actions to redeem the country from corruption and can’t just keep talking about corruption without doing anything about it.”

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